Session Speakers
The Burnurwurbskek Singers
Penobscot Nation
Singers/Drummers
Tawney Brunsch
Oglala Sioux
Executive Director | Lakota Funds
Chrystel Cornelius
Ojibwe; Oneida
CEO & President | Oweesta
Jayne Crosby Giles
Board Member | Maine Association of Nonprofits
Nadia Erosa
Rio Grande Valley Multibank CDFI Operations Manager | cdcb
Leroy Garcia
Brian Edwards
Associate Editor | Tribal Business News
Susan Hammond
Penobscot Nation
Relationship Manager for Native CDFIs | Fahe
Wendoyln Holland
Senior Advisor, Policy & Tax |Alliance for Tribal Clean Energy
Jaime Jackson
Senior Advisor | Rural Utilities Service (RUS) | USDA
Matthew Lewis
Passamaquoddy Tribe at Sipayik
Executive Director | Four Directions Development Corporation
Linda Marin
Director of Homeownership | cdcb
John Bear Mitchell
Penobscot Nation
Wabanaki Cultural Bearer/Storyteller/Singer
Ed Peace
Lender and Partner Activities Team | USDA Rural Development
Tagwongo Obomsawin
Clean Energy Partnership Program Manager | State of Maine Governor’s Energy Office
Chef Joe Robbins
Penobscot Nation
Native Chef | James Beard Nominee
Rudy Soto
Shoshone-Bannock
Deputy Assistant Secretary for the Office of External and Intergovernmental Affairs
Sean Skulley
Advisor, Environmental Impact | ESG Engagement & Impact | Fannie Mae
Pete Upton
Ponca Tribe of Nebraska
CEO | Native CDFI Network & Executive Director | Native 360 Loan Fund
Michael Volpe
Senior Vice President and Chief Bank Operations Officer | Federal Home Loan Bank of New York
Kristen Wagner
National Program Director | Native CDFI Network
Mel Willie
Navajo Nation
Director of Native Partnerships and Strategy | NeighborWorks
Caroline Yezzi
Lead Associate, Duty to Serve | Engagement and Impact | Fannie Mae Engagement
Additional speakers will be announced soon!
Sheila D. Herrera
Executive Director | Tiwa Lending Service
Sheila D. Herrera is the Executive Director of Tiwa Lending Services with over 35 years’ experience in the lending industry and with experience in coordinating and directing the implementation of economic/community development. As Tiwa Lending Services’ Executive Director, Ms. Herrera operates and manages Tiwa Lending Services, performing all home loan activities, including the origination and underwriting of loans, providing financial and homeownership counseling, preparing loan documents, closing loans, monitoring construction, disbursing payments and tracking the loan capital. Ms. Herrera is one of the founding members of Tiwa Lending Services. She was instrumental in developing the incorporation documents to establish Tiwa Lending Services and in developing the organizational and developmental capacity of Tiwa Lending Services. Ms. Herrera’s duties include planning, budgeting, financial reporting, bringing in private capital, as well as long-range planning to provide business lending and other financial related products and services.
Prior to coming to work with Tiwa Lending Services, Ms. Herrera managed the Isleta Pueblo Housing Authority’s Home Loan Program and served as a Homeownership Counselor. Ms. Herrera owned a mortgage brokerage business for seven years and worked in the banking industry. Ms. Herrera is a certified Homeownership Counselor and provides one-on-one counseling to applicants and borrowers. She also conducts Homeownership and Financial Literacy and Education workshops for Isleta Pueblo community members.
Pilar M. Thomas
Pascua Yaqui Tribe
Partner | Quarles and Brady, LLC
Pilar Thomas is a partner in the firm’s Energy, Environment & Natural Resources Practice Group. She focuses her practice on tribal renewable energy project development and finance, tribal economic development, federal Indian Law, and natural resource development.
Pilar assists clients with strategic legal advice on tribal energy policy and planning; clean energy and infrastructure project development and finance; federal and state energy regulatory, programs, and policy efforts; and federal requirements for tribal lands development. She has negotiated or assisted with agreements related to transmission lines, landfill gas, solar projects, a natural gas power plant, and mineral development on tribal lands. She serves as general counsel for several tribes, Section 17 and tribal business entities.
Representative Matters
- Negotiate leases and right of ways for utility scale renewable projects
- Shepherd through federal regulatory process for land into trust decisions and related environmental reviews
- Draft HEARTH Act leasing regulations
- Draft tribal laws, regulations, and policies related to economic development, land use, and environmental review
- Tribal consultation practices
- Monitor, review, and draft comments on federal and state agency actions
- Monitor, review, and draft federal legislation related to tribal energy development
Prior to entering private practice, Pilar was the Deputy Director for the Office of Indian Energy Policy and Programs at the US Department of Energy, where she was responsible for developing and implementing policy and program efforts within the department and federal government to achieve the office’s policy objectives related to the promotion of energy development, electrification, and infrastructure improvement on tribal lands. She also is the former Deputy Solicitor of Indian Affairs for the US Department of the Interior; served as the Interim Attorney General and Chief of Staff to Chairwoman Herminia Frias of the Pascua Yaqui Tribe; and was a trial attorney in the US Department of Justice, Environmental and Natural Resources Division, Indian Resources Section.
Mel Willie
Navajo Nation
Director of Native Partnerships and Strategy | NeighborWorks
Mel Willie leads NeighborWorks America’s Native work to expand its investment in tribal communities. He is a national leader in Indian Country with more than 23 years of experience in nonprofit management, government, political, public and intergovernmental affairs and has represented tribal interests at the local, tribal, state and national level. He is a member of the Navajo Nation, born and raised on the reservation in northeast Arizona.
Before joining NeighborWorks, he served as principal of Chee Consulting, working with a range of clients to advance and strengthen tribal communities. Having served as past executive director of the National American Indian Housing Council (NAIHC) and as special advisor to one of the nation’s largest public housing authorities, he is intimately familiar with providing affordable housing through highly regulated federal programs. Kennedy school.
Michou Kokodoko
Project Director – Community Development and Engagement |Minneapolis Federal Reserve | Center For Indian Country Development
Michou Kokodoko is a project director in the Minneapolis Fed’s Community Development and Engagement department. He leads the Bank’s efforts to promote effective community-bank partnerships by increasing awareness of community development trends and investment opportunities, especially those related to the Community Reinvestment Act.
Chrystel Cornelius
Ojibwe; Oneida
CEO & President | Oweesta
Chrystel Cornelius is the President & CEO of the Oweesta Corporation, a national Native CDFI intermediary predominantly serving Native communities across the United States, Alaska, and Hawaii.
Ms. Cornelius has worked with Native communities for most of her professional career, with more than 23 years of experience working in the Native economic development field. She is an enrolled member of the Oneida Nation of Wisconsin and a member of the Turtle Mountain Band of Chippewa Indians located in North Dakota. Ms. Cornelius has dedicated her career to capitalizing Native communities upholding tribal sovereignty and self-determination measures through the issuance of capital and organizational capacity building efforts.
Chrystel Cornelius is a founding steering committee member and previously held the position as the Board Secretary for the Native CDFI Network (NCN). Ms. Cornelius is also a former board member of Opportunity Finance Network (OFN), is a current board member of the Community Reinvestment Fund (CRF) and holds the position of Treasurer for the Red Feather Development Group. She is a BALLE Fellow and Skoll Fellow.
Ms. Chrystel Cornelius attained a bachelor’s degree in Business Management from the University of Mary in Bismarck, North Dakota.
Angie Main
Fort Belknap Gros Ventre Tribe
Executive Director | NACDC Financial Services, Inc.
Professional background includes over 30 years’ experience in grants administration & management, fund raising, business and financial literacy education, training and technical assistance for small business, and community development in Tribal communities. Since 2011, Executive Director for NACDC Financial Services, Inc., a Native Community Development Financial Institution (CDFI), located in Browning, MT, providing training, technical assistance and capital access to the eight (8) Montana Reservation communities. Since 2010, fundraised over $15 m in lending and operating capital.
Experience includes leveraging resources for housing, community and organizational development; business; non-profit; strategic and business planning; and resource development.
Former employment includes Executive Director, Montana Tribal Business Information Network, Missoula, MT; and Vice President, Fort Belknap College, Fort Belknap, MT. Current board member for Blackfeet Reservation Development Fund, Montana Nonprofit Association and Montana Community Foundation. Received the 2017 Visionary Leader Award at the annual Native CDFI Awards Reception and Ceremony, OFN Conference in Washington, D.C. Enrolled member of the Montana Fort Belknap Gros Ventre Tribe.
Rohit Chopra
Director of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau
Rohit Chopra is Director of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. As Director, Chopra is also a member of the Board of Directors of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation and the Financial Stability Oversight Council. In 2018, Chopra was unanimously confirmed by the U.S. Senate as a Commissioner on the Federal Trade Commission, where he served until assuming office as CFPB Director. During his tenure at the FTC, he successfully worked to strengthen sanctions against repeat offenders, to reverse the agency’s reliance on no-money, no-fault settlements in fraud cases, and to halt abuses of small businesses. He also led efforts to revitalize dormant authorities, such as those to protect the Made in USA label and to promote competition. Chopra holds a BA from Harvard University and an MBA from the Wharton School at the University of Pennsylvania.
Tawney Brunsch
Oglala Sioux Tribe
Executive Director of Lakota Funds
Tawney Brunsch, a member of the Oglala Sioux Tribe, is the Executive Director of Lakota Funds, a Native community development financial institution (CDFI) serving the Pine Ridge Reservation in South Dakota. Prior to joining Lakota Funds in 2008, Tawney worked with the Black Hills Federal Credit Union for eight years as a Branch Manager/Lead Lender. At Lakota Funds, Tawney has successfully led the organization’s achievement of key organizational benchmarks, including the chartering of the Lakota Federal Credit Union, expanding Lakota Funds’ lending area to the Rosebud Reservation, efforts to become an FSA-Guaranteed ag lender, and launching the Child Development Account (CDA) program, one of the first such programs in Indian Country. Nationally known for her community development efforts, Tawney serves on a number of boards and advisory committees including the Federal Home Loan Bank of Des Moines Advisory Council, the Community Advisory Council of the Federal Reserve Board, and the Native CDFI Network’s Policy Committee.
Tawney remains committed to economic development on the Pine Ridge Reservation in her roles as Lakota Federal Credit Union Board Chairman, and the Board Treasurer of Mazaska Owecaso Otipi Financial, a fellow CDFI focused on homeownership lending. She has been a leader of the South Dakota Native Homeownership Coalition since its creation in 2013, and currently serves on the Executive Committee, Policy Committee, and Veteran’s Committee and chairs the Physical Issues Committee.
CEO | Native CDFI Network & Executive Director | Native 360 Loan Fund
In addition to serving as NCN’s CEO and Chairperson, Pete Upton (Ponca Tribe of Nebraska) is the Executive Director of Native360 Loan Fund, a certified Native Community Development Financial Institution that focuses on entrepreneurship and financial literacy development for Native Americans. Serving as Executive Director since 2011, Mr. Upton has built the organization from its start-up phase into a successful lending organization that continues to experience growth while ever increasing its community impact. Mr. Upton has been involved with the Native CDFI Network since it was a grassroots movement. From 2011-2012, he served on the steering committee that was instrumental in the Native CDFI Network’s initial organizational development steps. In 2012, Mr. Upton became a founding board member and served as the Chairperson for the Peer Learning Committee. As Native360 serves Native communities in three states, Mr. Upton understands the challenges of serving both rural and urban areas in various different jurisdictions. He values strong networks and cultivates partnerships to deliver technical assistance throughout a vast service area. Mr. Upton is a powerful advocate for equal access to capital. Senior Advisor, Policy & Tax | Alliance for Tribal Clean Energy
Wendolyn Holland leads the critical policy and tax advocacy work of the Alliance. She has spent the last seven years of her career supporting tribes in achieving their clean energy goals by serving as an interface with federal and state agencies. She served as Senior Advisor for Commercialization in the Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy at the U.S. Department of Energy from 2008 through 2011. The position fostered national lab stewardship and was designed to carry these ideals from the Bush Administration into the Obama Administration. Holland served in 2012 as Director for Strategic Development and Technical Partnerships at Savannah River National Lab, which serves DOE’s Office of Environmental Management. Prior to federal service, she worked with clean energy and water start-up firms as either an owner or consultant. She responded to the terrorist attacks of 2001 by joining Global Options, a Washington, D.C. security, investigations, and counter-terrorism start-up, later serving as Vice President. Holland received her MBA in Finance and Strategy from Kellogg School of Management in 2001 and her BA in History and Studies in the Environment from Yale in 1991. Director of Strategy | Calvert Impact
Krystal Langholz is a Director of Strategy for Calvert Impact, supporting new product and program development. She assists the design and launch of new products that are built in response to market gaps. Krystal oversees the implementation of new programs and ensures that the lessons learned from these programs are disseminated with partners. She also supports syndicated transactions and provides general thought leadership to inform future strategy. Before her time at Calvert, Krystal served as the Chief Operating Officer and Executive Vice President of Strategy and Capitalization of the Oweesta Corporation, a national Native Community Development Financial Institution (CDFI) intermediary. Before her tenure at Oweesta, Krystal served as the founding Executive Director of Hunkpati Investments, a certified Native CDFI on the Crow Creek Indian Reservation in South Dakota. She holds a MA in cultural anthropology from Colorado State University and BA from Luther College. Krystal lives in Fort Collins, Colorado, with her husband, two children, and a golden doodle. National Program Director | Native CDFI Network
Kristen Wagner serves as the Native CDFI Network’s National Program Director. In this role, Wagner manages NCN grant funded programs, Membership Programs, and oversees the design and delivery of capacity-building supports to NCN members. Dr. Wagner built her 25-year career with a commitment to building more equitable economies in Native communities across the country and Indigenous communities globally. Director | Office of Tribal and Native Affairs | U.S. Department of the Treasury Fatima Abbas (Haliwa Saponi) serves as the first director of the U.S. Department of the Treasury Office of Tribal and Native Affairs. In this role she works with U.S. Treasurer Lynn Malerba, chief of the Mohegan Tribe, and the Treasury Tribal Advisory Committee to address needs identified by tribal leaders. Prior to this role, Abbas served as senior advisor to the Treasury Department in the Office of Recovery Programs, where she worked on the implementation of over $22 billion in relief funds to tribal governments to support their public health and economic recovery. Previously, Abbas served as the vice president of government relations for the National Congress of American Indians, where she supervised a seven-person policy team with a portfolio covering economic development and taxation. Abbas also served as the first in-house general counsel for the Karuk Tribe located on the California-Oregon border. During her service at Karuk, Abbas worked on a range of commercial matters, including financing, construction, and operation of the tribe’s first gaming facility and multiple tax-credit projects. Additionally, she served as a supervisory attorney for the Karuk Berkeley Collaborative, a tribal student clinic at the University of California, Berkeley School of Law that conducted research on natural resources and cultural resource issues. Prior to her service to the Karuk Tribe, Abbas served as deputy attorney general for the Colorado River Indian Tribes (CRIT) located in Western Arizona and Eastern California, where she worked on civil matters and prosecuted crimes on the reservation. Prior to working for CRIT, Abbas was a commercial litigation associate at Fox Rothschild, LLP, in the Philadelphia area. She is originally from urban Philadelphia and is a graduate of the Community College of Philadelphia, Temple University, and the University of California, Berkeley School of Law. During law school, Abbas interned with numerous organizations, including the Native American Rights Fund. She is a licensed attorney in California, Arizona, Pennsylvania, and New Jersey. Energy Counselor | USDA Rural Development Clare Sierawski is the Energy Counselor for Rural Development at the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA). She is a clean energy and climate change policy expert with over 15 years of experience in the field. Before USDA, she was working at the White House as the Special Assistant to the President for Climate Change Finance. She currently works to administer roughly $13 billion in funding for clean energy from the Inflation Reduction Act to benefit rural communities. Previous to that, she spent over five years working on clean energy development and deployment with governments and developers across West Africa based in Ghana, and before that she was the Chief of Staff for the Office of the Special Envoy for Climate Change at the U.S. Department of State where she managed the development of U.S. international climate policy and was instrumental in the Paris Climate Agreement and the U.S.-China climate change agreement. Clare holds a Master in Public Affairs from Princeton University and majored in Environmental Studies, Chinese, and Political Science at the University of Pittsburgh. State Small Business Credit Initiative | U.S. Department of the Treasury (Contractor) Zakaria Shaikh serves as a Consultant to the U.S. Department of the Treasury for the State Small Business Credit Initiative (SSBCI). He worked on the first iteration of the SSBCI program as an outreach manager and venture capital subject matter expert. Previously, he managed state venture capital programs, and held executive roles in strategy and operations for startups and large organizations. He holds an undergraduate and graduate degree in public health from the University of Southern California, and an MBA from the University of Michigan. Deputy Assistant Secretary for the Office of External and Intergovernmental Affairs Rudy Soto serves as the Deputy Assistant Secretary for the Office of External and Intergovernmental Affairs and responsible for the External and Intergovernmental Affairs team. Previously Rudy Soto served as USDA’s Rural Development State Director for Idaho since January 2021. In this role, Soto was instrumental in promoting economic development, increasing access to healthcare, and improving infrastructure in Idaho’s rural communities. Before that, Soto served as a legislative staffer in the U.S. House of Representatives, covering energy, environment, agriculture, and tribal affairs. Previously, he worked for Western Leaders Network, a nonprofit organization of local and tribal elected officials across the Interior West focused on protecting public lands, water, and air. Soto was born and raised in Nampa, Idaho, and is a proud member of the Shoshone Bannock Tribes of the Fort Hall Reservation and a veteran of the United States Army National Guard. He earned a bachelor’s degree from Portland State University. Advisor, Environmental Impact | ESG Engagement & Impact |Fannie Mae Sean Skulley is Advisor, Environmental Impact, on Fannie Mae’s ESG Engagement & Impact Team. Sean works with Single-Family and Multifamily business partners to develop strategies, plans, and programs to achieve Fannie Mae’s ESG and Duty to Serve goals. He helps drive the business’ engagement and impact on key ESG issues, including but not limited to affordable housing, sustainable housing, consumer education, climate change mitigation, and green homes. Prior to Fannie Mae, Sean worked in the utility industry and in environmental consulting, leading teams and programs that advanced the issues of energy efficiency, renewable energy, and greenhouse gas reductions. Sean received his MBA from The George Washington University and a B.A. in Environmental Policy from Colby College. Lead Associate, Duty to Serve | Engagement and Impact | Fannie Mae Engagement Caroline is a Lead Associate, Duty to Serve on Fannie Mae’s Engagement and Impact team in the ESG and Mission Department. Caroline provides leadership on Single-Family and Multifamily projects that support the three underserved DTS Markets: Rural Housing, Manufactured Housing, and Affordable Housing Preservation Market Plans. In her role, Caroline is focused on partnering with internal and external stakeholders on expanding Fannie Mae’s Native American Conventional Lending Initiative. Prior to joining Fannie Mae, Caroline worked at Education Advisory Board as a Senior Analyst in their Contract and Pricing Strategy Group where she led the launch of a new Salesforce Contracting system and developed a project to support relationships with Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCUs), helping schools access tools to increase student retention and graduation rates. Caroline is a graduate of Providence College in Rhode Island with a Bachelor of Science degree in Health Policy and a Minor in French Studies. Caroline is an avid runner and was an NCAA Division I Collegiate Track and Field athlete while at Providence. Senior Advisor | Rural Utilities Service (RUS) | USDA Jaime Jackson is a Senior Advisor for the Rural Utilities Service (RUS), US Department of Agriculture. Since joining RUS, Jaime facilitated launching and managing USDA’s $13 billion in Inflation Reduction Act funding for clean energy in rural America. Prior to joining RUS, Jaime served as Director of Investments at a clean energy finance authority where she led over $25 million in deployment of capital that financed renewable projects and benefited affordable community housing. Before that, she spent over 11 years at the Export-Import Bank of the U.S. where she led a $1.2 billion portfolio of power, mining, and high-technology corporate and project finance transactions spanning across Asia Pacific, Europe, Africa, and Latin America. Jaime successfully negotiated with governments, multilateral development banks and private equity firms to ensure contractual relationships, repayment of debt, and protection of assets. Jaime holds a Master of Business from the University of Maryland Robert H. Smith School of Business and is a proud alumnus from Clark Atlanta University. Associate Editor | Tribal Business News
Brian Edwards is Associate Editor of Tribal Business News. He covers policy and law, finance, and economic development. Policy and Markets Program Manager | State of Maine Governor’s Energy Office Ethan Tremblay serves as Policy and Markets Program Manager for the Governor’s Energy Office, focusing on a variety of renewable energy and grid modernization policy initiatives. Before joining the office, he worked in the private sector providing energy efficiency program administrators and utilities with program evaluation, customer analytics, and data management services. Ethan earned his Master of Science in Resource Economics and Policy from the University of Maine. Clean Energy Partnership Program Manager | State of Maine Governor’s Energy Office Tagwongo Obomsawin is the Clean Energy Partnership Program Manager for the State of Maine Governor’s Energy Office. In this role, she administers programs that support clean energy workforce development and innovation to advance Maine’s clean energy, climate, economic development, and workforce goals – including Governor Janet Mills’ goal of more than doubling Maine’s clean energy and energy efficiency jobs by 2030.
Chief of Staff | Rural Business Cooperative Service | USDA RD Leroy Garcia serves as the Chief of Staff to the USDA Rural Business-Cooperative Service Administrator Betsy Dirksen Londrigan. USDA’s RBCS offers programs to help businesses grow as well as job training for people living in rural areas. RBCS programs help provide the capital, training, education and entrepreneurial skills that can help those living in rural areas start and grow businesses or find jobs in agricultural markets and in the bio-based economy. Executive Director | Lakota Funds Tawney Brunsch, a member of the Oglala Sioux Tribe, is the Executive Director of Lakota Funds, a Native community development financial institution (CDFI) serving the Pine Ridge Reservation in South Dakota. Prior to joining Lakota Funds in 2008, Tawney worked with the Black Hills Federal Credit Union for eight years as a Branch Manager/Lead Lender. At Lakota Funds, Tawney has successfully led the organization’s achievement of key organizational benchmarks, including the chartering of the Lakota Federal Credit Union, expanding Lakota Funds’ lending area to the Rosebud Reservation, efforts to become an FSA-Guaranteed ag lender, and launching the Child Development Account (CDA) program, one of the first such programs in Indian Country. Nationally known for her community development efforts, Tawney serves on a number of boards and advisory committees including the Federal Home Loan Bank of Des Moines Advisory Council, the Community Advisory Council of the Federal Reserve Board, and the Native CDFI Network’s Policy Committee. Tawney remains committed to economic development on the Pine Ridge Reservation in her roles as Lakota Federal Credit Union Board Chairman, and the Board Treasurer of Mazaska Owecaso Otipi Financial, a fellow CDFI focused on homeownership lending. She has been a leader of the South Dakota Native Homeownership Coalition since its creation in 2013, and currently serves on the Executive Committee, Policy Committee, and Veteran’s Committee and chairs the Physical Issues Committee.
Board Member | Maine Association of Nonprofits Jayne is an independent consultant. She previously served as Development Director for Broadreach Family and Community Services and CEO of Mainestream Finance, the Community Development Finance Institution of Penquis Community Action Program. She was former Vice President of Commercial Banking at Machias Savings Bank, as well as a Vice President & Market Manager at Camden National Bank, and a Senior Vice President at Key Bank. Jayne also served for four years as a State Representative for House District #43 and served on the Appropriations and Financial Affairs Committees. Wabanaki Cultural Bearer/Storyteller/Singer John Bear Mitchell is a citizen of the Penobscot Nation from Indian Island in Maine. He presently works in higher education at the University of Maine and is a lecturer of Wabanaki Studies and Multicultural Studies. He has served on numerous museum and educational boards throughout the state with missions based on Maine’s Wabanaki people. He is a singer and storyteller that has presented traditional and contemporary programs in Native American Stories and Song. His is featured in many Maine PBS, tribal-sponsored awareness videos, independent film, HBO Lionsgate TV, and many documentaries with topics on Maine’s Native People. Senior Vice President and Chief Bank Operations Officer | Federal Home Loan Bank of New York Mr. Volpe is Senior Vice President and Chief Bank Operations Officer of the FHLBNY. In this role, he directs and oversees Bank Operations as well as FHLBNY’s housing mission through the Community Investment department. Additionally, he served as Interim Community Investment Officer from December 2022 through December 2023. Mr. Volpe joined FHLBNY in January 1989 serving in various roles including First Vice President and Director of Bank Operations, Director of Member Services Operations, Director of Collateral and Correspondent Services, and Director of Collateral Operations. From 1998 to 2006, Mr. Volpe took a hiatus from FHLBNY where he held various positions at The Bank of New York’s application architecture group. He received a B.S. in Finance and M.B.A. in International Finance from St. John’s University (NY) and is also a graduate of the ABA Stonier Graduate School of Banking. Finance & Loan Analyst | Policy, Analysis, and Communications Division | Single-Family Housing Guaranteed Loan Program | USDA Rural Development I began my career with USDA Rural Development over 18 years ago, working as a student intern while attending Fort Valley State University (FVSU). For the past 3 years, I have specialized in the Guaranteed Loan program. Throughout my time at the agency, I have gained valuable experience across many of Rural Development’s programs including housing, multi-family housing, community programs, and business and industry loans. As a Finance & Loan Analyst, one of my primary duties is keeping the SFH Guaranteed Loan Program Technical Handbook up-to-date by reviewing and revising policies to ensure they remain current. I also develop program-related workplans and draft rules and guidance. In addition, I respond directly to general questions from the public submitted via email and through the CALL USDA phone line. I take pride in helping people access Rural Development’s resources and in furthering the agency’s mission. Relationship Manager for Native CDFIs | Fahe Susan Hammond is the Relationship Manager for Native CDFIs at Fahe, a CDFI serving in rural and Native communities with a mission to building the American Dream of homeownership. Her main focus is to develop strong partnerships with Native CDFIs by providing training and support in accessing the secondary mortgage market, which will increase access to capital for NCDFIs while also addressing the severe housing needs faced by Native families and communities. Susan is a citizen of the Penobscot Nation, a tribe in central Maine. She has dedicated her career to growing investments in Native economies and serving Native communities. Singers/Drummers The Burnurwurbskek Singers are a men’s drum group from the Penobscot Nation at Indian Island, Maine. This group has been performing traditional Wabanaki songs for audiences across Maine and other states for many years. Executive Director | Four Directions Development Corporation Matthew is a citizen of the Passamaquoddy Tribe at Sipayik with comprehensive expertise in non-profit sectors and community development financial institutions. He is the Executive Director at Four Directions Development Corporation. In this role, Matthew champions the preservation of Wabanaki culture and traditions through economic development efforts. Matthew has over a decade of experience working alongside Municipal, State, Tribal, and Federal Governments, administering revolving loan funds and executing community development projects. Outside of his professional life, he enjoys crafting intricate Excel formulas, tinkering with electronics to automate household tasks, and exploring the scenic Maine woods with his wife. Native Chef | James Beard Nominee Penobscot Chef Joe Robbins is catalyzing change within and beyond indigenous foodways with a deep-rooted connectedness to the land and water and a vision for the future of contemporary Indigenous culture that knows no bounds. In his life and work, Robbins is changing the conversation to put Native American food on the map in ways that transcend its complex history as a source of survival to show that cultural preservation is not locked in the past, but is emerging and evolving in dynamic ways. When he’s not in the kitchen, Robbins is creating a ripple effect with the next generation by collaborating to develop indigenous-based educational programming in the classroom and community to shift the paradigms of the past toward a new vision for the future. Director of Homeownership | cdcb Linda Marin is the Director of Homeownership for cdcb. Linda has been with cdcb for 25 years. Linda holds a B.B.A. degree in Finance from the University of Texas at Austin, and previously worked for the Washington Mutual as a DE Underwriter. She is responsible for underwriting all loans and issuing loan commitments for all cdcb loan products as well as coordinating cdcb’s entire mortgage lending operations from loan application through closing. Rio Grande Valley Multibank CDFI Operations Manager | cdcb Nadia Erosa is the Rio Grande Valley Multibank CDFI Operations Manager for cdcb. Nadia has been with cdcb for 15 years & administers the cdcb Loan Servicing Department, the RGV Multibank CDFI and its subsidiary The Community Loan Center (the Small Dollar Loan Program) and its nationwide CLC Franchises. Nadia oversees loan origination process, program compliance for both the mortgage and SDLP servicing. She was an integral part of a unique, proprietor loan servicing software used by their SDLP and its Franchises. Lender and Partner Activities Team | USDA Rural Development Ed grew up on a farm in rural south Georgia and graduated from the University of Georgia (Go Dawgs!) with a Bachelor’s degree in Agricultural Economics.
Pete Upton
Ponca Tribe of Nebraska
Wendolyn Holland
Krystal Langholz
Kristen Wagner
Fatima Abbas
Haliwa Saponi
Clare Sierawski
Zakaria Shaikh
Rudy Soto
Shoshone-Bannock
Sean Skulley
Caroline Yezzi
Jamie Jackson
Brian Edwards
Ethan Tremblay
Tagwongo Obomsawin
Leroy Garcia
Prior to joining USDA, Garcia was the Special Assistant to the Assistant Secretary of the Navy for Manpower and Reserve Affairs at the Department of Defense. In 2014, Garcia was elected to represent Colorado’s 3rd State Senate District, covering Pueblo, Pueblo West, and part of Salt Creek. He became Assistant Minority Leader at the start of the 2017 Legislative Session and Senate President at the start of the 2019 Legislative Session. In 2020, he was unanimously re-elected to continue in his role as Senate President for the 73rd General Assembly. During the 2020 presidential election, Joe Biden selected Senator Garcia to serve on his national Latino Leadership Committee, as well as a co-chair of Colorado’s Latino Leadership Committee. Prior to the Colorado Senate, Senator Garcia served in the Colorado House of Representatives. From 2001 to 2007, Garcia served in the U.S. Marine Corps and deployed to Iraq as a mortuary affairs specialist in 2003. Garcia is a first-generation college graduate with a master’s degree in organizational management from Ashford University in Clinton, Iowa, a bachelor’s in management from the University of Phoenix, and an associate degree in emergency medical services from Pueblo Community College.
Tawney Brunsch
Oglala Sioux
Jayne Crosby Giles
John Bear Mitchell
Penobscot Nation
Michael Volpe
Stephanie Freeman
Susan Hammond
Penobscot Nation
The Burnurwurbskek Singers
Penobscot Nation
Core members of the group are Ron Bear, his two sons Nick Bear and Cree Neptune Bear, and Nyle Sockbeson. The group is also often accompanied by traditional Native American dances, performed by Ron’s daughter Selena Neptune Bear and others. The Burnurwurbskek Singers are honored to continue to share their Native American drumming, singing and dances with Indian Country and others.
Matthew Lewis
Passamaquoddy Tribe at Sipayik
Chef Joe Robbins
Penobscot Nation
Linda Marin
Nadia Erosa
Ed Peace
A thirty-five+ year employee of USDA Rural Development, he has served in numerous roles, including Loan Officer, Appraiser, Underwriter, Collecting Agent, and Construction Inspector in USDA RD Local Offices across Georgia. He has also held positions as Specialist and Program Director for the Single Family Housing programs in Georgia’s USDA State Office. He now serves on USDA’s National Headquarters staff serving on the Lender and Partner Activities team focusing on partner training and outreach.
He lives in Blackshear, Georgia with his wife of 39 years – together, they have three grown children.